on the outside of the glass
the world condenses,
the possibilities of refraction coalescing
into browns and yellows and greyscale.
perched on a stack
of TIME magazines from 1994,
on a kitchen table with two legs wobbly,
under a window where the blinds
are brittle with age and never opened.
in the book the pages turn and turn
with page 31 marked with cigarette burns.
kicked haphazard under the bed,
the tiny legs splayed and bent oddly,
her plastic eyes and plastic mouth
wear the same expression
no matter the abuse.
with half her hair gone,
the holes
where the thread was wound
show like gaps between stormclouds.
in the book the words spin and spin
while on page 31 the door is kicked in.
in the corner, slick and silent,
a fat black spider watches the lazy flies.
well-fed, well-rested,
and
ready to spin another loop,
the predator cocoons in carnivorous thoughts.
today, across the kitchen cabinets;
tomorrow, beneath the sink.
in the book the story runs and runs
and on page 31 the speaker's spell is spun.
a hand draped across the edge of the tub,
gracing porcelain with skin
of equal tone and timbre.
the water laps, though the bather is still;
droplets drip, though the steam has spread.
her eyes half-closed, her pulse slows
as the water cools.
in the book the narrator leaps and leaps
while on page 31 the secret will keep.
on the table, a letter, a token,
a gesture with crisp lines
and clean edges.
a rejection for a school or a job,
perhaps, or a thirty-day notice
or a summons or receipt.
read once and abandoned,
returning
to its original shape.
in the book the plot whips and winds
and on page 31 the reader divines.
Monday, May 28, 2012
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